Two hundred crew members are coming to the city, along with 250 local crew hires and 150 extras, Cuomo said. The production will book 3,000 hotel nights and spend $400,000 on local vendors, $120,000 on craft service, and $120,000 on restaurant meals, Cuomo estimated.

“The wait is over: The Amazing Spider-Man 2 is coming to Rochester,” Cuomo said in a statement. “Since the day we announced the shooting of this movie in New York, franchise fans in Rochester and all across the state have been eager to get a glimpse of the action happening right in their backyards.”

The state has increased its film productions after expanding its film-tax-credit program, which provides $450 million a year in breaks to production companies.

In a statement, Cuomo said that 338 projects that have filmed or applied to the program since Cuomo took office in 2011. He said the films are resulting in $5.2 billion in spending in the state.

Some lawmakers and fiscal watchdogs have been critical of the spending. The state is cutting $90 million this year to the developmentally disabled, but is providing tax breaks to Hollywood, said Assemblyman Kieran Michael Lalor, R-Fishkill, Putnam County, who is holding a news conference tomorrow on the issue.

“There was money for Hollywood, but not the developmentally disabled. The developmentally disabled don’t have high-powered lobbyists to pull strings in Albany,” Lalor said in a news advisory today.